Quote:
Originally Posted by Ian SS
He's not obligated to pay more. Based on the Supplier code he provided he only qualifies for Supplier pricing. The dealership messed up and undercharged him. Now they want him to either pay the price he was supposed to pay(even the OP admits it was supposed to be a Supplier deal) or return the car. He's not obligated to pay anything extra but if he's not going to pay the price he was supposed to pay he needs to give the car back and not purposefully rack up a ton of miles.
Since it is a finance deal OP literally has no power, they can kill the deal and ask for the car back even if OP coughs up the $2400. They just have to disclose to the next buyer that someone already took it home and the deal fell through.
If you walk out of the grocery store and they say "hey you didnt pay for the milk" do you say "f*ck you" and drive away? No, you go back and pay for the milk.
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I don't agree at all with your logic.
First of all I didn't just walk into a Chevy dealership and take a brand-new Camaro and drive off with it without paying for it. I paid a big down payment signed the paperwork (the paper work that took hours and that multiple people looked through) and drove away like a normal human being does when they buy a new car.
My scenario is more like this: I go into a grocery store and see milk on sale for $.99. I buy the milk get out to the parking lot, drink a little bit of it and the manager comes running out and says Hey! That milk was really five dollars but we screwed up and put the wrong price tag on it!! Pay me $4.01 right now or else I'm taking that milk and putting it back on the shelf."
At that point I would drink all the milk in his face and throw the carton back at him, and worse yet, I'm a pissed off customer that's going to tell all my friends, family, brothers, uncles, cousins & co-workers don't go to that grocery store. It may seem like they offer good pricing but in the end they rip you off.